Faramarz Romer
Analyst · Columbia Management. Your line is now live
Thank you, David, and good morning, everyone. 2023 was one of the best years for Greenlight Re as we posted the largest full-year underwriting income in our history and delivered the best growth in book value per share in a decade. As Greg mentioned, we rounded the year with the fifth consecutive quarter of underwriting profits. Our net income for the fourth quarter of 2023 was $17.6 million or $0.50 per diluted share compared to $34.8 million or $0.91 per diluted share in the comparable period. For the full year 2023, we earned net income of $86.8 million or $2.50 per diluted share compared to $25.3 million or $0.73 per diluted share in 2022. We reported an underwriting income of $11.8 million during the fourth quarter and a combined ratio of 91.4% compared to $6.5 million and a combined ratio of 94.2% during the equivalent 2022 period. The fourth quarter of 2023 combined ratio included 2.5 percentage points related to increase in reserves on casualty and workers' compensation contracts that I will discuss later. For the 2023 year, our underwriting income was a record $32 million or 94.5% combined ratio compared to a loss of $11 million or 102.3% combined ratio. The 7.8% improvement in combined ratio was partially related to lower catastrophe losses during 2023 and partially related to improved pricing on the in-force book. Adjusting for casualty event losses, our current year loss ratio for 2023 improved by four percentage points to 54.9% compared to 58.9% during the comparable period in 2022. During the fourth quarter, our net premiums written decreased by $10.6 million or 9.1% to $105.3 million compared to the same quarter in 2022. The decrease is timing related primarily due to premium adjustments based on updated reporting received from cedents on our FAL and transactional liability business. Net premiums earned was $137 million, an increase of $26.1 million, or 23.4% compared to the same quarter in 2022. For the full year, our net premiums written increased 13.1% to $637 million, with the growth spread across property, casualty, and specialty books. Within our specialty book, we saw a small decrease in net premiums written of $1.9 million, or 10% during the fourth quarter, mainly driven by a smaller participation on a homeowner's contract renewed in 2023. On a full year basis, the property net written premiums grew by 32.8%, mainly from new commercial property contracts and new business generated from our innovations portfolio. The composite ratio for the property business was 64.1% for the fourth quarter, compared to 103.9% during the comparable period in 2022. The improvement was partially driven by reserve releases on a motor contract and partially due to an increase in earned premiums at better margins. Moving to our Casualty book. Net premiums written decreased by $12 million, or 16.4% during the fourth quarter, primarily relating to the FAL 2022 year of account due to premium adjustments booked during the quarter. On a full year basis, the net written premiums increased 6.7%, driven by new and renewed general liability, professional liability, and to a lesser extent, motor liability business. This increase was partially offset by the workers' compensation class, where we continue to move away from proportional business and are finding pockets of attractive excessive loss business. The composite ratio for the casualty business improved marginally to 100.1% in the fourth quarter, compared to 101% during 2022. During the quarter, we bolstered our reserves on certain casualty contracts ranging between 2015 and 2017 treaty years, and on workers' compensation contracts relating to 2020 and 2021. Turning now to our specialty book, net premiums written increased by $3.4 million, or 14.5% during the fourth quarter, mainly within the marine and accident and health classes. This was partially offset by a decrease in the financial class resulting from premium adjustments on transactional liability business. For the full year 2023, net premiums written increased 11.1%, as we took advantage of the hard market conditions, primarily growing our marine, energy, aviation, and cyber books. The composite ratio for the specialty business increased to 73.6% in the fourth quarter, compared to 63% during the comparable period in 2022. The increase relates to losses on a 2022 energy contract, partially offset by reserve releases on the transactional liability business. Our underwriting expense ratio for the fourth quarter increased to 5.5% from 3.7% in the same period in 2022. The expense ratio for this quarter included 1.5 percentage points of deposit interest expense. The deposit interest expense arose from a deposit-accounted retroceded motor contract, which experienced favorable development during the quarter. Excluding the deposit interest expense, the underwriting expense ratio increased marginally related to personnel expenses. Total general and administrative expenses increased by $6.5 million during the fourth quarter to $15.4 million, compared to $8.9 million in the fourth quarter of 2022. Approximately $4.4 million of the increase related to non-recurring costs of the management transition, and the remaining increase was due primarily to higher headcount compared to the same period in 2022. We reported total net investment income of $13.6 million during the fourth quarter of 2023, compared to $32.5 million in 2022. We earned $8.6 million of interest income on our restricted cash and cash equivalents and on our funds at Lloyds. Our investment in the Solasglas Fund reported a gain of $0.9 million or 0.3% and our innovations investments reported a net unrealized gain of $4 million in the fourth quarter. At the end of the fourth quarter, our fully diluted book value per share was $16.74, an increase of 3.7% from September 30, 2023, and an increase of 16.8% from December 31, 2022. I should mention that we have revised our calculation for basic and fully diluted book values per share. In prior years, we calculated the basic book value per share by adjusting the denominator to exclude certain unearned performance-based restricted shares. The revised calculation uses the total outstanding ordinary shares when calculating the denominator for basic book value per share. We then add all unvested restricted stock units and any in the money options to the denominator to calculate the fully diluted book value per share. We believe this better reflects the ultimate dilution to our shareholders. Please refer to our earnings press release and form 10-K filed yesterday for the revised calculations. Our shareholders' equity at December 31, 2023 increased by $93 million to $596 million, reaching the highest level since 2017. In conclusion, the company ended the year with a very strong performance from both a financial and capital perspective, and we are well positioned going into 2024 to continue delivering on our financial metrics and growing the book value for our shareholders. Pat will now discuss the 1/1 renewal season.